Geometric flow control of shear bands by suppression of viscous sliding. | Academic Article individual record
abstract

Shear banding is a plastic flow instability with highly undesirable consequences for metals processing. While band characteristics have been well studied, general methods to control shear bands are presently lacking. Here, we use high-speed imaging and micro-marker analysis of flow in cutting to reveal the common fundamental mechanism underlying shear banding in metals. The flow unfolds in two distinct phases: an initiation phase followed by a viscous sliding phase in which most of the straining occurs. We show that the second sliding phase is well described by a simple model of two identical fluids being sheared across their interface. The equivalent shear band viscosity computed by fitting the model to experimental displacement profiles is very close in value to typical liquid metal viscosities. The observation of similar displacement profiles across different metals shows that specific microstructure details do not affect the second phase. This also suggests that the principal role of the initiation phase is to generate a weak interface that is susceptible to localized deformation. Importantly, by constraining the sliding phase, we demonstrate a material-agnostic method-passive geometric flow control-that effects complete band suppression in systems which otherwise fail via shear banding.

publication outlet

Proc Math Phys Eng Sci

author list (cited authors)
Sagapuram, D., Viswanathan, K., Mahato, A., Sundaram, N. K., M'Saoubi, R., Trumble, K. P., & Chandrasekar, S.
publication date
2016
publisher
keywords
  • Deformation Processing
  • Flow Instability
  • Cutting
  • Shear Bands
  • Metals
altmetric score

30.5

citation count

46

PubMed ID
27616920
identifier
299707SE
Digital Object Identifier (DOI)
start page
20160167
end page
20160167
volume
472
issue
2192